A Drought In Ireland Just Revealed Something Astonishing In This Field

Soaring temperatures in Ireland have revealed a never-before-seen circular feature believed to be thousands of years old.

Drone footage taken on July 10 shows the ancient henge visible in a field of crops along a river bed. The feature was discovered near Brú na Bóinne, an UNESCO World Heritage Site in Newgrange, Ireland, designated in 1993 to preserve Europe’s largest and most important group of prehistoric megalithic art that served social, economic, religious, and funerary functions millennia ago. Here, three burial mounds known as Knowth, Newgrange, and Dowth are surrounded by about 40 satellite passage graves.

Anthony Murphy, who discovered the ancient circles with photographer Ken Williams, told Irish media that the images show features, such as posts and pits, that retain moisture better than the rest of the soil. In these places, the crop grows quicker and healthier than the plants suffering from the drought.

“Myself and Ken Williams of Shadows and Stone imaged some very substantial and previously unrecorded features in the fields near Newgrange this evening,” Murphy wrote on the Mythical Archaeology Facebook page. “They look like giant henges or enclosures, very similar in scale to Site P, and forming a row-of-three with P. Have a look at these very exciting photographs. If these turn out to be substantial discoveries, then I would be nothing short of utterly elated, chuffed and excited.”

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The field is reportedly privately owned, and when the crops are harvested, the henge will no longer be visible. Muphy said he was “shaking with excitement” after the discovery, and has been discussing the findings with an archaeologist. The Department of Culture, Heritage, and the Gaeltacht said they are currently investigating the “wonderful discovery” to help determine more information about the site, including whether or not experts will be able to excavate it.

The heatwave has revealed other sites as well, including long-lost British settlements and Roman farms and forts more than 1,500 years old. The last time a heatwave of this magnitude struck the region was in 1976, at which point capturing the features – which can only be seen by air – would have required an expensive aerial flyover.